Graphics, Image for <i>Two Loves and a Life</i>
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THE   ADELPHI   THEATRE   CALENDAR
A Record of Dramatic Performances at a Leading Victorian Theatre
Formerly the Sans Pareil (1806-1819), later the Adelphi (1819-1900)
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Title:Two Loves and a Life check.png
Description:Two Loves and a Life by Tom Taylor and Charles Reade.  Scene: Bardsea Hole by moonlight. space.gif
1st Performance:Mar 20, 1854 space.gif
Theatre:Adelphi space.gif
Source:The Illustrated London News, Apr 1, 1854, p. 296 space.gif
Review:The Illustrated London News, Apr 1, 1854, pp. 295-296 space.gif
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ADELPHI THEATRE.--"TWO LOVES AND A LIFE."

Messrs. Reade and Taylor's meritorious drama, thus entitled, continues to be attractive and fully justifies the commendations which have been bestowed upon it.  It is desirable to encourage literary merit in productions for the stage and particularly where, as at the Adelphi, much account is made of certain theatrical effects.  Far are we from undervaluing these, for well we know taught both by precept and experience that unless the proprieties of the stage are observed the best writing may prove inoperative.  Melodrama is the skeleton of a play, to which poetical or literary ornamentation is as the flesh and the blood charming both by its texture and its tinct.  Too frequently the ordinary audience of a theatre has been satisfied with the bony spectre and been terrified and agitated with its ghastly doings, by which such audience has heretofore, at any rate, been strongly moved and excited though the cultivated taste has been outraged.  The general enlightenment of the people is now no longer content with such meagre stage exhibitions, and hence the most popular of theatres is becoming every day more classical in its entertainments.  The scenery and appointments, at the same time, judiciously receive the same attention as ever, as may be witnessed by the illustration herewith presented.  The scene is that of Bardsea Hole by moonlight—the rendezvous for the Jacobite conspirators, whither the poor schoolmaster John Daw (Mr. Keeley) is compelled to journey by Father Radcliffe (Mr. Webster) much against the grain, in dread of the pistol which he believes to be levelled at his head behind.  Here the gentlemen of the northern counties consult as to the best means of promoting the Pretender's claims and renew their oaths of fidelity to his cause.  But all is in vain.  The troops of the Duke of Cumberland are upon their track, and they are taken in the snare.  Like the other incidents of this drama, there is not much novelty in the situation just described.  The merit in this, and the other instances, lies in the skill with which the interest is prepared for and elaborated.  The whole serves to show how successfully genius or talent may deal with old materials giving new life even to the obsolete and stamping its peculiar impress on the outworn details of traditional stage-craft, thereby making its own what must otherwise have passed into oblivion as either dull or dead.  Thus re-animated, these ancient sources of interest again rightfully challenge public attention and command a legitimate success.

ADELPHI THEATRE.--"THE MOUSTACHE MOVEMENT."

An occasional piece, entitled "The Moustache Movement," was produced on Thursday.  There is no attempt at plot, but the movement alluded to is caricatured by presenting a butcher, a baker, a waiter, and a lawyer's clerk, with the specified ornament on the upper lip.  The last-named worthy is personated by Mr. Keeley, and wins the heart of a milliner by wearing a false moustache.  This, by a series of mistakes and escapades, he is at last compelled to confess, and divests his lip of the appendage, which he surrenders into the hands of Mrs. Kelley, who, thereupon, addresses the audience in a parody of Rosalind's epilogue to Shakspeare's [sic] "As You Like It," in favour of whiskers and beards.  The whole thing is the veriest trifle; but, by the aid of good acting, sufficed to please the pit--which, indeed, seemed to be exceedingly amused.

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The Illustrated London News, Apr 1, 1854, p. 295

 

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The Illustrated London News, Apr 1, 1854, p. 296

 

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OF PAGE

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PAGE

EDITORIAL
PAGE

DAILY
CALENDAR

AUTHORS
& TITLES

ACTORS &
ACTRESSES

COMPOSERS,
MUSIC & SONG

MUSICIANS
& SINGERS

DANCE,
ENTERTAINMENT
& SPECTACLES

MANAGEMENT
& BACK STAGE

All-INCLUSIVE
INDEX

BIBLIOGRAPHY

GRAPHICS
GALLERY

THEATRE
RESEARCH

ADELPHI
TODAY

BOOK
VERSION

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MAP

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Copyright © 1988, 1992, 2013 and 2016 by Alfred L. Nelson, Gilbert B. Cross, Joseph Donohue.
Originally published by Greenwood Press as The Sans Pareil Theatre 1806-1819, Adelphi Theatre 1819-1850: An Index to Authors, Titles, Performers, 1988, and The Adelphi Theatre 1850-1900: An Index to Authors, Titles, Performers and Management, 1992.
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The Adelphi Theatre Calendar revised, reconstructed and amplified.  Copyright © 2013 and 2016  by Alfred L. Nelson, Gilbert B. Cross, Joseph Donohue.  This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License, with the exception of graphics from The Clip Art Book, edited by Gerard Quinn and published by Crescent in 1990.  These images are reproduced in accord with the publisher’s note, which states "The Clip Art Book is a new compilation of illustrations that are in the public domain.  The individual illustrations are copyright free and may be reproduced without permission or payment.  However, the selection of illustrations and their layout is the copyright of the publisher, so that one page or more may not be photocopied or reproduced without first contacting the publishers."